Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Jason Maas, Tight Situations - 690

Originally published Dec. 26, 2010

The Fort Lauderdale Yankees were vying for a spot in the Florida State League championship game in late August 1987 and Jason Maas wasn't in the lineup. That was actually part of Fort Lauderdale Manager Buck Showalter's plan. And it worked.

Put
in as a pinch hitter in the eighth inning Aug. 29, Maas smacked a
two-run double, putting Fort Lauderdale over the top and sending them to
the championship series, The South Florida Sun-Sentinel wrote.

"When
you make out a lineup, you always try to leave people in the dugout
who you have confidence in to deliver in a tight situation," Showalter told The Sun-Sentinel of Maas. "And he certainly wasn't the only one."

While he helped single-A Fort Lauderdale that year, and would help Yankee teams as high as AAA Columbus, Mass would not make the Yankees in the Bronx or any other major league team.

He would retire in 1991, after seven seasons in the Yankees system, and not on good terms with his parent club.

Maas was taken a year ahead of his brother Kevin Maas, who was also selected by the Yankees. The two even played together at several points in their minor league careers.

Jason
Maas started his Yankee career at short-season Oneonta in 1985, hitting
.286 in 67 games. He moved to single-A Fort Lauderdale in 1986, his average dropping to .259.

Maas
split 1987 between single-A Prince William and Fort Lauderdale, playing
Fort Lauderdale into the championship series. Between the two, he hit
.254. His time at Prince William, however, was the less successful of the two, hitting just ..197 in 45 games.

That
June, for Fort Lauderdale, the Maas brothers combined for seven hits,
four of them Jason's, in a 9-2 win over St. Petersburg, The Sun-Sentinel wrote.

Jason Maas made AA Albany-Colonie in 1988, the first of two years he would spend with the Eastern League team. He hit .271 his first year and .296 the next.

"We all started hitting, and for the first time, we all started thinking about the playoffs," Mass told The Gazette.

Maas made AAA Columbus in 1990, hitting .248 for the Clippers. But, while his brother had a break-out second half in the Bronx, Jason Maas stayed behind in the minors. And he returned to Columbus in 1991.

The
second year at Columbus, Maas hit .352 in 30 games. But his career
ended after a dispute with the big club. Maas asked for his release, not
believing the Yankees were going to bring him up. The Yankees refused.
Maas responded by retiring and making plans to go to college.

"They never treated him well," brother Kevin Maas told a reporter
in early August. Kevin Maas also went into a slump after the dispute
came to a head. "It's sad to see my brother end up on that type of
note."